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Synopsis
Annie
Braddock (Scarlett Johansson) is a young woman from a working-class
neighborhood in New Jersey, struggling to understand her
place in the world. Fresh out of college, she gets tremendous
pressure from her nurse mother to find a respectable position
in the business world although Annie would prefer to trade
in her blackberry for an anthropologist's field diary.
Through a serendipitous meeting, Annie ends up in the elite
and ritualistic culture of Manhattan's Upper East Side -- as
remote from Annie's suburban New Jersey upbringing as life
in an Amazon tribal village. Choosing to duck out of real life,
Annie accepts the position as a nanny for a wealthy family,
referred to as simply "the X's." She quickly learns that life is not
very rosy on the other side of the tax bracket, as she must
cater to the every whim of Mrs. X (Laura Linney) and her
precocious son Grayer, while attempting to avoid the formidable
Mr. X (Paul Giamatti). Life becomes even more complicated
when Annie falls for a gorgeous neighbor of the X’s
(Chris Evans) who she nicknames Harvard Hottie, and is
forced to explore what she wants to do with her life.
“I
think the movie has a lot to say about narcissism,” says
Linney, “The thing about Mrs. X being so absent and yet
so controlling is that in her mind she’s doing absolutely
everything right. She’s basically terrified of her own
child. She wants to love him but she really doesn’t know
how.”
“A
lot of people need nannies because they work,” says Pulcini. “It’s
a rich topic and it’s a dilemma. Kids are always going
to fall in love with someone they spend so much time with.
And how do you balance that? This seems to hit a nerve with
people, and maybe that’s why the book was such a phenomenon.”
“Grayer’s
mother is not very happy, his father’s always gone, they
make a lot of money, but there’s no unity, no family,” says
Keys. “There’s always another nanny, another person
to take him wherever he has to go. There are people that do
grow up like that, and are just kind of shuffled from person
to person and don’t have that base where they feel protected
and loved.”
“I
think the message of the movie is that it’s really important
to take the time to know your child,” says Murphy. “And
it’s true for my character as it is for Laura’s
character. You need to nurture and love your child in the particular
way that that child needs.”
“THE
NANNY DIARIES is an exploration of the options of a woman in
contemporary society,” says Springer Berman. “What
kind of woman can you be? There’s motherhood, there’s
career, there’s all sorts of examples of what it’s
like to be a woman presented in this movie, and Annie is this
young woman on the verge of her life, and she’s thrown
into all these different circumstances and ultimately comes
up with who she is. I hope that it shows one woman’s
exploration into who she’s going to be as a woman, and
finding herself.”
“THE
NANNY DIARIES is about the pressure we put on our kids to have
a passion and to succeed, and be adults when we’re still
kids,” says Johansson. “You’re pushed out
of the house and it’s like ‘Okay, what now?’ I
think it’s very insightful about the kind of the crisis
that young people go through in their twenties.”
“There’s
a fairy tale quality to THE NANNY DIARIES,” says Giamatti. “Laura
is a kind of evil stepmother as opposed to Donna, who is Scarlett’s
good mother; I am a Big Bad Wolf type of guy, and Scarlett
is a little like Cinderella. I think it has a fairy tale quality
of someone becoming a better person after a lot of trials and
tribulations. But hopefully, it’ll be a funny movie too.”
About The Production
In 2002, the satirical novel “The Nanny Diaries” was
published to critical acclaim, blockbuster sales, and a substantial
degree of notoriety. The book’s controversy was inspired
by the fact that its authors, Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus,
had spent a combined eight years working as babysitters in Manhattan,
for over thirty families. As their novel presented a scathing
and hilarious portrayal of an astronomically affluent Park Avenue
family, the media began whispering, “who’s-the-book-really-about?” While
the authors insisted their book was fiction, it was written in
such a knowing style that it practically invited this kind of
speculation.
Months
before the hoopla, the book’s film rights were
purchased by Producer Richard N. Gladstein (FINDING NEVERLAND,
THE CIDER HOUSE RULES) and his associate Gary Binkow, for Miramax. “It
was just as good an idea when we first read it,” says Gladstein, “but
it obviously puts a different responsibility on us as filmmakers
once so many people have read the book—we have to get it
right. But our intention all along was to make our own film.”
Gladstein had become friendly with screenwriter/directors Shari
Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini when he met with them about
a screenplay they had previously written. After seeing an advance
screening of their acclaimed film, AMERICAN SPLENDOR, he approached
them about writing the screenplay for THE NANNY DIARIES, and
subsequently, to direct as well.
At
first glance, it might seem surprising that Springer Berman
and Pulcini would follow their portrayal of the humdrum life
of Cleveland file clerk Harvey Pekar in AMERICAN SPLENDOR by
exploring the high-flying upper crust of THE NANNY DIARIES. “We
really liked that the setting was so drastically different,” says
Pulcini. “It was very appealing to jump into a completely
different world.”
“I’m a native New Yorker,” says Springer Berman, “and
I could tell that the women who wrote the book were real New
Yorkers—it wasn’t a fantasy from someone who lives
someplace else. It was truthful, and a very interesting portrait
of a subculture that I found fascinating.”
The
novel also connected to a theme that the directors have been
fascinated with throughout their career. “The book
is about work,” says Springer Berman. “Harvey Pekar
spends a lot of time talking about his boring job, and even our
documentaries, like THE LAST DAYS OF CHASEN’S,” are
about work environments. A nanny is a job that is often invisible;
I felt we could tap into that.”
Springer
Berman herself went through a period of her life very similar
to the heroine of THE NANNY DIARIES. “Right after
I graduated from college, I got a job working for a husband and
wife screenwriting / producing team,” she says. “I
worked out of their home and got totally entrenched in their
lives. I wasn’t a nanny, but it was a very nanny-like situation.
For me, it was a point in my life to duck out and not have to
make any decisions. When I read the book, it appealed to me to
write a script about a phase—which I think most young people
go through—where they don’t know who they are yet.” In
keeping with Springer Berman’s personal connection to the
story, the filmmakers made the main character, Annie Braddock,
a recent graduate, rather than still a student, as in the book.
A
big challenge Springer Berman and Pulcini faced in translating
the novel into a film was that much of the story was told through
Annie’s inner thoughts. The filmmakers use some narration,
but they also devised more cinematic strategies. As Annie is
an observer at this point in her life, they made this more explicit
by turning her into anthropology major. When Annie looks at various
characters in the film—generally career women—she
fantasizes seeing them in diorama cases in the Museum of Natural
History. “She steps outside herself,” says Pulcini, “and
she becomes a hundred percent observer.” In the book, many
of the characters—usually the moneyed ones—were given
generic names like Mr. and Mrs. X, Harvard Hottie, etc. While
this may have been because the authors wanted to keep their real
subjects anonymous, Springer Berman and Pulcini retained them
in the movie, which fit in well with Annie’s anthropological
perspective. On the other hand, they changed the name of the
main character—whose real name is “Nanny” in
the book—to “Annie.” “We wanted her to
lose her name and her identity when she went to work with the
X’s,” says Springer Berman.
Springer
Berman and Pulcini also tipped their hats to the most iconic
nanny movie ever, “Mary Poppins,” with fantasy
sequences of Annie grasping a bright red umbrella and floating
over the Manhattan skyline. “We wanted to capture the whimsical
feeling of “Mary Poppins” and “The Sound of
Music,” but also to juxtapose that a little bit with the
reality of New York,” says Pulcini. “We loved the
idea of using the red umbrella as a symbol of her desire for
freedom and escape from her life and her problems.”
Perhaps
the most notable change from the novel is that the contrast
between Annie’s home life and the X’s was heightened. “In
the book, the class difference was pretty subtle,” says
Pulcini. “Shari and I felt that if she was more of a bridge-and-tunnel
girl it would be more interesting, as the environment she throws
herself into would be more of a culture shock.”
Casting
Springer Berman and Pulcini turned to one of America’s
leading young actresses, Scarlett Johansson, to play Annie. “Scarlett
has been great at playing a glamorous role, or a vixen, but prior
to SCOOP, I don’t think movies have taken advantage of
her comic ability,” says Springer Berman. “People
underestimate how terrific she is at playing an ordinary person
with insecurities. She’s also very good at physical comedy—her
pratfalls were amazing.” “Scarlett has great wit,
great timing, and is also a great dramatic actress,” say
Pulcini. “We’ve always admired her and imagined her
in the role,”
Annie’s not quite like anybody I’ve ever played,” says
Johansson. “Even though she’s sort of lost—and
I’ve done characters like that before—she’s
quite confident in herself as a woman. I think that’s the
difference between her and someone like Charlotte in LOST IN
TRANSLATION. There’s also a youthfulness to her that’s
different from my other characters.”
Two-time
Oscar nominee Laura Linney (THE SQUID AND THE WHALE, KINSEY,
YOU CAN COUNT ON ME) joined the cast as the spoiled socialite
Mrs. X. “It was great to cast Laura in a role where she
can be really glamorous,” says Springer Berman. “I
think she has this person in her, but I don’t think she’s
played that role a lot.” “Laura is a great actress
but she wasn’t an obvious choice,” says Pulcini. “People
associate her with more earthy roles, but she actually grew up
on the East Side.” “I didn’t grow up inside
the world of Mrs. X, but I certainly saw a lot of it,” says
Linney. “I went to a school where many of the girls were
daughters of Mrs. X-types. I’m more aware of this lifestyle
now than when I was younger, but I certainly saw glimpses of
it then.”
Another
casting choice that might seem offbeat is AMERICAN SPLENDOR’s
Paul Giamatti as Mr. X. “People assume because of the roles
Paul plays in movies that he is an uneducated working class guy,” says
Springer Berman, “but in fact, he’s the son of A.
Bartlett Giamatti, who was the President of Yale and the Commissioner
of Baseball. Paul went to a boarding school, and has multiple
degrees from Yale. He’s moved in those circles all his
life, and he’s also a fantastic actor—in my opinion,
the greatest actor there is. One of the things Bob and I like
to do is cast people in roles we haven’t seen them in.
It was also interesting to cast Paul as an unsympathetic character,
because he’s so well-known for being sympathetic—and
see what he can do.”
“I actually like playing the bad guy,” says Giamatti. “It’s
fun. I pop in every now and then and bark at somebody or do something
creepy. Mr. X is so excessively unpleasant and awful, and a lot
of time is spent never looking at his face, so there’s
this great anticipation of what’s he’s going to look
like—and then he looks like me! He’s not the sort
of Aryan guy you think he’s going to be.”
Giamatti
has known Laura Linney socially for a long time, but has never
really acted with her (although they both were in THE TRUMAN
SHOW) before THE NANNY DIARIES. “She’s one
of those people that make you a hell of a lot better just being
around them,” says Giamatti. “She’s definitely
one of the best actresses around. And she’s also very funny.”
A
pivotal part of the story of THE NANNY DIARIES is how Annie
falls in love with her charge, Grayer X, played by 7-year-old
Nicholas Reese Art. In order for the story to work, the audience
would have to feel their bond, how it would be impossible for
Annie to leave him, despite the oppressiveness of her job. “When
Scarlett read with Nick, we wanted to be absolutely sure that
they had chemistry,” says Pulcini. “When I first
met with Nick,” says Johansson, “I recognized something
in him and I felt a kinship to him immediately. He’s a
regular kid, but when it comes time to film he’s amazingly
focused.” “The truth is, while we were making the
movie, Scarlett and Nick fell in love, and those two were inseparable,” says
Springer Berman. “It was unbelievable how much they connected.” The
filmmakers were very impressed with the young actor’s professionalism. “When
Nick is working he doesn’t fidget, he listens when you
give him direction and really wants to know how he is supposed
to feel in a scene,” says Pulcini, “but as soon as
we stop rolling, he’s a kid again.”
The
filmmakers turned to Broadway leading light Donna Murphy to
play the Annie’s mother Judy, a woman with high aspirations
for her daughter. “Judy is pushing Annie to go into finance,
which Annie knows in her heart isn’t right for her. But
she doesn’t have the heart to tell her. “Judy is
a very special role in the film because she’s really the
catalyst for everything Annie does in the course of the film,” says
Pulcini. “So the person who played Judy had to be very
strong, but she also had to be very sympathetic—there had
to be a double play of strength and guilt going on. And Donna
isn’t like that in person, but when she read for the role
she was a hundred percent what we were looking for.”
“Judy put herself through nursing school, and worked overtime
so that her daughter could have opportunities that she never
had a chance to have for herself,” says Murphy. “She
wants Annie to have a career that will guarantee her financial
security, but that’s not necessarily what Annie wants,
and they end up somewhat at odds.”
Grammy-winning,
multi-platinum recording artist Alicia Keys joined the cast
as Lynette, Annie’s feisty best friend. “Lynette
is crazy and spunky—I call her noisy,” says Keys. “She’s
loud and her colors—she wears a lot of accessories and
jewelry—are loud. When she’s in the room, you know
she’s in the room. She might not exactly fit into what
the majority is doing, but she’s fun.”
While
Springer Berman always had an instinct that she wanted Keys
to play the role, neither of the directors knew if she could
act. In fact, Keys, whose mother is an actress, began acting
in theatre as a child (and even made an appearance on “The
Cosby Show”). “I’ve always loved acting,” says
Keys, “but as I got older I realized how much my passion
for music was so prevalent--so that’s the direction I went
into. But I’ve always loved the way you can watch a movie,
or go to the theatre, and be totally enraptured in people that
don’t even exist. There lives become your pain, your pleasure,
your happiness. And that’s the same thing that music does
for me. I feel that acting and music are brothers and sisters.” “Alicia
is a real spitfire girl,” says Johansson, “and everybody’s
always in such good spirits when she’s around. She’s
a great actor and she’s certainly a better improvisational
actor than I’ll ever be.”
Springer
Berman and Pulcini saw over a hundred actors for the role of
Harvard Hottie, the handsome preppie who tries to romance Annie. “We wanted the man who would just make Scarlett’s
heart melt,” says Springer Berman. “Chris Evans came
in and blew us away. He gave a fantastic audition and looked
incredible. I think he’s the next Robert Redford.”
“Harvard Hottie meets Annie and they have a nice little
interaction,” says Evans. “But when they bump into
each other at a bar a couple of weeks later, his buddies make
a fool out of themselves, and he wants to show her that he’s
not one of those Upper East Side jerks. She rejects him the first
couple of times, but he persists until he gets her to go out
with him.”
“In Annie’s mind, he’s out of her class,” says
Springer Berman, “and he is out of her class. In Harvard
Hottie’s mind it isn’t an obstacle, but then again,
he comes from the upper-class, so he’s got nothing to lose.” “Annie
also understands that part of her job description is no life
allowed,” says Pulcini. “She knows that if she’s
even seen in the building with this guy, it means the loss of
her job.”
“I think Harvard Hottie understands Grayer’s situation,
which pretty much mirrors his own” says Evans. “It’s
the type of lifestyle where you have to mature early, and you
can adopt some pretty nasty tendencies along the way. So that’s
why Scarlett’s character feels the need to make sure the
kid doesn’t end up like his father.”
The
cast relished the experience of working with a directing team. “I’m amazed at how harmonious their relationship
is,” says Johansson. “I’m not sure exactly
how they divvy things up,” says Giamatti. “They just
sort of feather into each other,” says Linney. “One
might give an emotional direction and one might give a physical
direction. They seem to cover each other really well, and you
feel like you’ve gotten the full spectrum, sort of the
feminine and masculine analysis of the character,” says
Johansson. “They’re good actors’ directors
because I find them extremely simple about what they tell you
to do. They’re aware of how to talk to each actor the way
they need to be talked to,” says Giamatti. “I think
it’s a credit to their marriage that they’re able
to communicate so well and compliment each other so beautifully,” says
Linney.
The
Look Of The Film,
And Sound Of The Music
It was important for the production team that THE NANNY DIARIES
be filmed entirely in New York, and, as much as possible, on
location. “We worked very hard to find great locations
all over Manhattan,” says executive producer Dany Wolf. “We
were lucky enough to film at the Museum of Natural History, the
Metropolitan Museum, Central Park, Bergdorf Goodman, among others.
New York’s embraced our production with open arms.” “I
think Shari and Bob are trying to make this film a real love
letter to New York with all its eccentricities, wonderful locations,
and amusing people,” says Linney. “There’s
no place like New York.” “The notion of creating
New York City somewhere else, would be crazy,” says Gladstein.
Working
with cinematographer Terry Stacey (who previously teamed with
them on AMERICAN SPLENDOR), Springer Berman and Pulcini sought
to photograph New York with a heightened sense of reality,
like an urban fairy tale. “We were thinking about something
a bit along the lines of a contemporary BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S,” says
Springer Berman. “That’s the references we started
with, and then Terry was the one who made it happen.”
Not
all the grandeur of New York City was found outside. “We
scouted some pretty incredible apartments,” says Pulcini. “You
don’t realize what’s behind some of the doors in
Manhattan. I remember we saw one apartment that was so big that
I lost all the people we were scouting with—just wandering
around.” “It gives you a really different perspective
on your life and the place that you live,” says Springer
Berman.
Most
of the film’s interiors were shot on real locations
all over New York, but production designer Mark Ricker created
the X’s immense and opulent apartment at Steiner Studios
in Brooklyn. Ricker emphasized the formality of the place by
playing with symmetry. “It’s hard to look anywhere
in the apartment without finding pairs of everything,” says
Ricker. “There are pairs of mirrors, pairs of lamps, pairs
of doors—there’s no place for anything to be out
of place. If it is, you’d know right away, because the
other thing is still where it was.”
Costume
Designer Michael Wilkinson previously teamed with Springer
Berman and Pulcini on AMERICAN SPLENDOR, where the attire tended
to be on the grungy side. “We were really excited to present
him with a film where he could really go to town,” says
Pulcini. And boy did he!” Among other things, Wilkinson
created a host of outfits for various high and low society characters,
as well as Namibians, Samoans, Pierrot clowns, and a Betsy Ross
costume for Scarlett. “Everything you could possibly imagine
is represented in the wardrobe of this movie,” says Pulcini.
With
the costumes for Annie and Mrs. X, Wilkinson, Springer Berman
and Pulcini collaborated closely with the actors. “I
think everything that Scarlett wore in the move—except
the gray business suit, which she hated, but Annie hated as well—was
something Scarlett would have worn in real life,” says
Springer Berman. “We wanted Annie to be someone who had
her own idiosyncratic style that was a little bit funky and unique
to her. We wanted her to be as far as possible from Mrs. X who
could buy the big designer outfit of the moment. Annie couldn’t
afford to do that, but she could walk into a thrift shop and
find an old dress for under a hundred dollars and look like she’s
wearing some designer outfit.”
Mrs.
X’s luxurious couture wasn’t seen only as an
expression of her privileged world. “One of the things
we talked about with Michael and Laura is there’s an element
of insecurity with Mrs. X,” says Pulcini. “She’s
from money, but she’s probably not from the kind of money
that Mr. X and his family are from—so she overcompensates
a little bit for that. We talked about her being the kind of
person that’s always trying on a look and maybe going one
step too far with it. She’s always trying to present some
image of herself that may not necessarily be her.” “Laura’s
character is like a peacock,” says Wilkinson. “She
wants the other ladies to comment on how fabulous she looks.
I said to Shari and Bob that when she comes into a room she should
feel like a bouquet of flowers in the room. So we used lots of
floral colors.”
* * *
Music
THE NANNY DIARIES boasts an eclectic assortment of music from
such diverse countries as Mali, Peru, Madagascar and France
and includes original score inspired by these international
sounds. “Being that Annie frames her whole nanny experience
as an anthropological field diary, we decided to utilize world
music throughout the film. It is a musical metaphor for our
main character’s journey as an outside observer in a
strange culture.” said Springer Berman. Working with
long time collaborator, composer Mark Suozzo (AMERICAN SPLENDOR),
the filmmakers fashioned a score that blends influences from
artists including Ali Farka Toure, Serge Gainsbourg, George
Michael and Les Baxter. “We wanted the music in the film
to reflect Annie’s perspective at this, pivotal moment
in her life,” says Pulcini.
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